Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

59 Sentences With "use profanity"

How to use use profanity in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "use profanity" and check conjugation/comparative form for "use profanity". Mastering all the usages of "use profanity" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Corporate lawyers don't use profanity when addressing US federal regulators—at least not in public.
To go out and physically beat the shit out of each other, but not use profanity?
Politicians also use profanity to express a heightened level of outrage and draw attention to something.
I was banned from buying ads because, wait for it, I use profanity in my feed.
The novel was criticized by some as "anti-cop" and for containing drug use, profanity, and sexual references.
Sources tell TMZ, 50 had been warned not to use profanity during his performance in front of 40,000 people.
They were not permitted to refer to their crimes or their victims, to depict violence or to use profanity.
They were not permitted to refer to their crimes or their victims, to depict violence or to use profanity.
The show famously removed some barriers set in place by Roddenberry, allowing characters to refer to God and use profanity.
She doesn't use profanity and she tries to mix up her subjects to appear more human and less bot-like.
Presidential debate organizers have to warn candidates not to use profanity, and serious congressional hearings often devolve into bad comedy roasts.
A concerned mom, she refused to use profanity on her pages, and would substitute asterisks to cloak sh*t and f*ck.
It's really a shame they can't use profanity on network TV, because these two really deserve a big f*ck you from Amelia.
Amodei said his office received several hundred calls from students during the walkout and that Christiansen was the only caller to use profanity.
The ALA said "The Hate U Give" was protested for the book's inclusion of "drug useprofanity, and offensive language," not anti-police sentiments.
Sondland said Wednesday that he and Trump often use profanity in their communications while confirming an exchange between them while Sondland was in Ukraine.
These people may use profanity from time to time—this is videogame YouTube land, after all—but they won't send slurs blasting through your headphones.
So far, no music or ads are allowed within the stories, and publications can't use profanity either, in accordance with FCC guidelines, according to Google.
Hong Kong is a city that prides itself in civility: people queue for the bus, control their emotions, don't use profanity, and do use sunscreen.
A witness also told police that when the group was asked to leave, the three women became angry and began to use profanity and threaten violence.
Another thing is, I think maybe I used to use profanity in a bit more of a shock-y way, as opposed to a strategic way.
"We believe that when people use profanity they are indicating their emotional state to us, and it's not something that people always do," Dr. Bergen said.
"If you use profanity you will be blocked and when you need help you won't be able to get it," one admin repeatedly advised on the app.
"Unless I'm caught with a camera I didn't see, I'm not going to use profanity in public," Bush said to laughter in Bluffton, South Carolina, on Wednesday.
"We've never had problems with being told we're not advertiser-friendly," said Mr. Wood, who said he did not use profanity or offensive material in his videos.
Remember, I was making a profound statement: I did not use my fist, I did not use profanity, I used grace and elegance and quiet strength as my tools.
Ms DeLappe has a keen ear for the bravado and awkward diffidence of adolescent speech, and the way teens use profanity and sarcasm to test each other and perform themselves.
Brian Schatz quipped, "The main thing is that Steve King does not use profanity and that is what matters in the end" -- an apparent reference to the backlash surrounding freshman Rep.
A team of researchers from the United States, Netherlands, the UK and Hong Kong found that people who use profanity are less likely to be associated by others with lying and deception.
If you swear during a presentation it will suggest that you don't use profanity, and it will even highlight culturally insensitive phrases or alert you if you're just lazily reading off the slides.
"The Hate U Give," by Angie Thomas Thomas' debut novel, written as a reaction to the police shooting of Oscar Grant, includes drug use, profanity and sexual references, which are reasons it was challenged.
The way conservative Christian publications do film criticism is usually tied more to content issues than to the movie as a whole; in other words, a movie is objectionable if characters use profanity or have sex, no matter the context.
Gamers that want to get paid can't use profanity, can't use hate speech and advertisers have a list of games that they don't want their products to be associated with (so no ultra-violent nazi-killing fantasy extravaganzas… which means I'm not eligible for payouts).
"So [Tommy] was like 'Oh, what the f—' and took it off and put it on his lap, and then this guy comes up to our table — we have no problem, the hat's off everything's cool — and is like 'Excuse me, I heard you use profanity,&apos" she continued.
President Trump wasted no time after tying a bow on his meeting with Kim Jong-un to finally punch back, so to speak, at the actor Robert De Niro, who spent the last couple of days publicly slamming the president, going as far as to use profanity during the Tony Awards on Sunday night.
Moosa uses comedy to tackle sensitive issues like Islamic stereotypes, Islamophobia, racism and prolapsed hemorrhoids. His other subjects range from Bollywood to current politics to apartheid. Moosa chooses not to use profanity and explicit vocabulary.
Vocalist Scott Stapp and guitarist Mark Tremonti wrote the song about one of their friends who had committed suicide. The lyrics deal with the difficulties in finding happiness and meaning in the world. It is the only Creed song to use profanity. The first half of the word "goddamn" is censored on the 2004 Greatest Hits album.
Encyclopedia of Islam (2009). Page 515. "The Quran states, “The most beautiful names belong to God (allah) so call on him by them; but shun such men as use profanity in his names: for what they ... of God), Abd al-Salam (Servant of Peace), or Abd al-Jabbar (Servant of the Powerful)." He was born in Asadabad near Hamadan, Iran.
"Can't Knock the Hustle" was produced by Dave Sitek of TV on the Radio fame. The song contains influences from funk music and Latin music. It is described as a funk rock song by Stereogum and disco by Paste, while Beyond the Stage Magazine categorizes it as pop rock. It is also one of the only Weezer songs to use profanity.
Cover versions were recorded by Wynonie Harris, Lionel Hampton, Big John Greer, Johnny Burnette, Jerry Lee Lewis, and Mike Bloomfield's Electric Flag (as "Wine"). The song lent its name to the alcoholic fruit drink spodi. In 1946 Granville and Brownie McGhee wrote a version of the song that didn't use profanity. Harlem Records released the new version in January 1947.
Sir Ethelbert would use profanity; His language drove me near insanity. So once again I served humanity, To keep my love alive. Sir Curtis made me cook each dish he ate, And everything his heart could wish he ate, Until I fiddled with a fish he ate, To keep my love alive. Sir Marmaduke was awfully tall; he didn’t fit in bed.
Lindsey Lewis and her boyfriend Ben House are left on Earth after the rapture. The souls of the worthy have been taken to Heaven while everyone else has been left behind. The people left on Earth must fend for themselves in a world now plagued by evil locusts that constantly yell "suffer!", talking crows that use profanity, brimstone, wraiths, and storms that rain blood.
Hague was born in Huntington, West Virginia, however, as a child his family moved to El Paso, Texas. Hague had a wife, Mickey, whom he had a daughter with. His father was a Chief Master Sergeant in the United States Army. As a player, Hague made it a personal preference not to use profanity and instead replaced it in his speech with the word mullet.
Ross made himself accessible to students and participated in school activities whenever possible. Those around him found him "slow to condemn but ready to encourage ... [and they] could not recall hearing Ross use profanity or seeing him visibly angry."Benner (1983), p. 222. Every month, he prepared grade sheets for each student and would often call poorly performing students into his office for a discussion of their difficulties.
In October 2014 FCKH8 released the video Potty-Mouthed Princesses Drop F-Bombs for Feminism. The video consists of young girls aged six to thirteen talking about gender inequality in society. The children use profanity during the video, in particular the f-word. Like the Ferguson video, the video features t-shirts sold by FCKH8 and the statement that $5 from the sale of each shirt will be donated to five related causes.
"Kumba Yo!" is a 2001 collaborative single by Guano Apes (credited as Guano Babes) featuring German comedian Michael Mittermeier. This song is notable for being the only Apes song to use profanity, with only one use of the word "fucking" in the song and serves as their highest-charting single in their native Germany. The song uses elements of the song "Kumbaya". The video shows the band capturing and tying Mittermeier to their car.
MIT graduate Jonah Peretti attempted to order a pair of shoes from Nike. He chose to have the word “sweatshop” embroidered on them. Nike sent Peretti an email explaining that his personalization request could not be granted for one of four things: it contained another party's trademark or other intellectual property, the name of an athlete or team Nike does not have legal right to use, profanity or inappropriate slang, or was left blank.
The album identifies Tyga's past effort of alternative rap rock due to the pop rock style of Decaydance Records label. This was the rapper's "clean" debut attempt, which features no explicit language or references, except of one vague noun use of the word "shit" in the song "Pillow Talkin'" and some explicit language in the deluxe edition tracks, before his full shift to explicit style of rapping in 2009, however, Tyga did use profanity during his early mixtape days, such as Young on Probation.
Augie developed his earliest material with help from local comedian Andy Bumatai, who taught him that it isn't always necessary to use profanity in order to get a laugh. The surviving members of Booga Booga (James Grant Benton and Ed Ka'ahea) also mentored him; Augie had performed with them in 1993. Augie won the Nā Hōkū Hanohano Award for Comedy Album of the Year with "Da Comedy Kahuna" in 1999. He won a second Hōkū Award in the comedy category with "Locally Disturbed" in 2003.
After April 1963, Capitol allowed Brian to produce their records himself, following Murry's insistence. Murry accompanied the group on their first Australasian tour in January 1964, and required that the band not fraternize with women, use profanity, or drink alcoholic beverages. During his early years, Wilson charged the group $100 for breaking these requirements, but for this tour, he raised the fine to $1,000, which he would subtract from the touring proceeds. At the time, Wilson's influence on the Beach Boys ignited tensions within the group.
His plays were among the first in Russia to use profanity, and are known for it. His scant use of profanity violated taboo at the time, but set the stage for much more pervasive obscenities by 2010. After living and working in Moscow for a time, Kolyada returned to Yekaterinburg, and has been instrumental in bringing the city's theater activity to prominence. He has taught playwriting at the Ural Institute and the Ekaterinburg State Theatre Institute since 1992, often teaching auditors as well as enrolled students.
Designed for mature audiences, Conker's Bad Fur Day features graphic violence, alcohol and tobacco use, profanity, vulgar humor, and pop culture references. Conker's Bad Fur Day was developed over the course of four years. Although it was originally designed for a family audience, the game was retooled into its current form because previews were criticised for being both too cute and similar to Rare's earlier platform games Banjo-Kazooie and Donkey Kong 64. Upon release, Conker's Bad Fur Day was acclaimed by video game critics, who praised its visual appeal and smart humour.
We don't hear a fucking thing." As the opposing team enters the field, the Northern Guard chant "Come and get it," which has become the group's unofficial motto. The Northern Guard are known for their use of smoke bombs, lighting dozens of large bombs a match in their stands, as well as for vulgarity and profanity. SB Nation soccer editor Sean Spence wrote that "...despite the presence of several families in their midst, they are loudly, hilariously vulgar, and use profanity with a ferociousness and familiarity that is almost admirable.
Some users on Twitter began tweeting politically incorrect phrases, teaching it inflammatory messages revolving around common themes on the internet, such as "redpilling" and "Gamergate". As a result, the robot began releasing racist and sexually-charged messages in response to other Twitter users. Artificial intelligence researcher Roman Yampolskiy commented that Tay's misbehavior was understandable because it was mimicking the deliberately offensive behavior of other Twitter users, and Microsoft had not given the bot an understanding of inappropriate behavior. He compared the issue to IBM's Watson, which had begun to use profanity after reading entries from the website Urban Dictionary.
When the PWF closed in 1999, South opened his own promotion called the Exodus Wrestling Alliance. He still runs shows as of 2005 in the Mid-Atlantic area and participates in Christianity/wrestling shows with Nikita Koloff and Ted DiBiase. One of his gimmicks is the fact that he gets heel heat from the fans by sticking his tongue out at them and taunting them about how he is manhandling their hero in the ring. He is proud of the fact that he does not have to get crude, use profanity, or become vulgar to get heel heat.
Fairfax's chief of staff and policy director conceded that he did use profanity but denied it was towards his accuser and Fairfax demanded NBC and its reporters retract their reporting. After the story broke, Fairfax hired the same legal team that represented Brett Kavanaugh during his confirmation process, while Tyson hired the same legal team that represented Kavanaugh's accuser Christine Blasey Ford. Virginia Congresswoman Jennifer Wexton tweeted her support for Tyson. On February 8, 2019, a second woman, Meredith Watson, came forward with sexual assault allegations against Fairfax, alleging that he raped her in a "premeditated and aggressive" attack in 2000 when both were undergraduate students at Duke University.
On February 11, 1996, Stretch and Bobbito began airing their show Sundays on Hot 97, the prominent commercial hip hop radio station in New York, while continuing to air late Thursdays on WKCR. The transition to Hot 97 resulted in new FCC restrictions on the hosts and guest lyricists who could no longer use profanity, which altered the show's overall vibe and created a schism in their core listenership. While the show had changed its time slot and demeanor for Hot 97, the artists who appeared on the show continued to be prominent and relevant. Guests on their Hot 97 show included DJ Premier, Black Star, De La Soul, Common, Xzibit, Noreaga, Brand Nubian, and more.
The American Library Association listed the book as one of the ten most-challenged books of 2017 and 2018, "because it was considered 'pervasively vulgar' and because of drug use, profanity, and offensive language". In July 2018, a South Carolina police union raised objections to the inclusion of the book, as well as the similarly themed All American Boys by Brendan Kiely and Jason Reynolds, in the summer reading list for ninth- grade students of Wando High School. A representative of the police lodge described the inclusion of the books as "almost indoctrination of distrust of police" and asserted that "we've got to put a stop to that." The books remained on the list and Wando's principal was later recognized by the state school library association for her defense of the challenged books.
Alison Flood, Minnesota school's ban on graphic novel draws free-speech protests, The Guardian, 25 May 2016. The Comic Book Legal Defense Fund also challenged its removal in a K-12 library in Henning, Minnesota but restored the book in the library for students with parental permission in grades 10-12. This One Summer has been featured on the American Library Association's "Top Ten Most Challenged Books" list in 2018 as the 7th most challenged book and 1st in 2016 “for profanity, sexual references, and certain illustrations”. According to the ALA, the reasoning for banning includes its use of LGBT characters, drug use, profanity, and sexuality explicit. In response to the criticism, author Mariko Tamaki stated, ‘“[T]here are people who are uncomfortable with any discussion of sexuality, who see this as inappropriate, maybe, for any age of young reader,” she said. “But really what expelling these books does is erase queer experiences, queer lives.”’ Another reviewer Meryl Jaffe identifies the issues regarding the profanity or sexuality within the novel but states they are appropriately developed and represent an accurate depiction of young teen life.

No results under this filter, show 59 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.